Find other sites about
-
More Than 100 New Species Discovered In Hawaiian Islands From the page: A three-week scientific expedition to French Frigate Shoals in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Marine National Monument returned to Honolulu on Sunday with the discovery of many new species and a better understanding of... more
Reviewed by Olgui Nov 01 2006, 10:53am ( 4 reviews ) • sciencedaily.com
-
vsatishin
vsatishin
1,286 Favs
-
midnight-creeper
midnigh...
2,527 Favs
-
Olgui
Olgui
5,477 Favs
-
Ariette
Ariette
3,253 Favs
-
UltraTech
UltraTech
281 Favs
-
asdfbrendan
asdfbre...
6,274 Favs
-
evilonion
evilonion
6,794 Favs
-
luv4bunnies79
luv4bun...
7,423 Favs
-
Zaxy
Zaxy
17K Favs
Recently online -
Angry-Gus
Angry-Gus
8,821 Favs
- 2 reviews
- Reviews of the site
-
Join StumbleUpon or login to add a review!
-
Rated by vsatishin on Nov 01 2006, 7:29pm
this is exactly what I was talking about... (Science Daily is good as long as it is free ;P ).
-
Rated by Olgui on Nov 01 2006, 10:53am
More Than 100 New Species Discovered In Hawaiian Islands From the page: A three-week scientific expedition to French Frigate Shoals in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Marine National Monument returned to Honolulu on Sunday with the discovery of many new species and a better understanding of marine biodiversity in the Hawaiian Archipelago. An all-star team of world-renowned taxonomists (biologists specializing in identifying and naming organisms) and an experienced support crew collected and photographed many species that they cannot identify and are thought to be new species to science. The expedition found several potentially new species of crabs, corals, sea cucumbers, sea squirts, worms, sea stars, snails, and clams. Many other species were found that are known from other areas but have never been recorded from French Frigate Shoals, the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, or even the Hawaiian Archipelago. From this expedition, well over a hundred new species records will likely be identified for French Frigate Shoals. Image: This crab was collected during a three-week expedition to the Northwestern Hawaiian Island National Monument. (Credit: Joel Martin, NHMLAC, NOAA)
